Plug is:
- A specification for composable modules between web applications
- Connection adapters for different web servers in the Erlang VM
Documentation for Plug is available online.
defmodule MyPlug do
import Plug.Conn
def init(options) do
# initialize options
options
end
def call(conn, _opts) do
conn
|> put_resp_content_type("text/plain")
|> send_resp(200, "Hello world")
end
end
The snippet above shows a very simple example on how to use Plug. Save that snippet to a file and run it inside the plug application with:
$ iex -S mix
iex> c "path/to/file.ex"
[MyPlug]
iex> {:ok, _} = Plug.Adapters.Cowboy.http MyPlug, []
{:ok, #PID<...>}
Access "http://localhost:4000/" and we are done!
You can use plug in your projects in two steps:
-
Add plug and your webserver of choice (currently cowboy) to your
mix.exs
dependencies:def deps do [{:cowboy, "~> 1.0.0"}, {:plug, "~> 1.0"}] end
-
List both
:cowboy
and:plug
as your application dependencies:def application do [applications: [:cowboy, :plug]] end
In the hello world example, we defined our first plug. What is a plug after all?
A plug takes two shapes. It is a function that receives a connection and a set of options as arguments and returns the connection or it is a module that provides an init/1
function to initialize options and implement the call/2
function, receiving the connection and the initialized options, and returning the connection.
As per the specification above, a connection is represented by the Plug.Conn
struct:
%Plug.Conn{host: "www.example.com",
path_info: ["bar", "baz"],
...}
Data can be read directly from the connection and also pattern matched on. Manipulating the connection often happens with the use of the functions defined in the Plug.Conn
module. In our example, both put_resp_content_type/2
and send_resp/3
are defined in Plug.Conn
.
Remember that, as everything else in Elixir, a connection is immutable, so every manipulation returns a new copy of the connection:
conn = put_resp_content_type(conn, "text/plain")
conn = send_resp(conn, 200, "ok")
conn
Finally, keep in mind that a connection is a direct interface to the underlying web server. When you call send_resp/3
above, it will immediately send the given status and body back to the client. This makes features like streaming a breeze to work with.
In practice, developers rarely write their own plugs. For example, Plug ships with a router that allows developers to quickly match on incoming requests and perform some action:
defmodule AppRouter do
use Plug.Router
plug :match
plug :dispatch
get "/hello" do
send_resp(conn, 200, "world")
end
forward "/users", to: UsersRouter
match _ do
send_resp(conn, 404, "oops")
end
end
The router is a plug and, not only that, it contains its own plug pipeline too. The example above says that when the router is invoked, it will invoke the :match
plug, represented by a local match/2
function, and then call the :dispatch
plug which will execute the matched code.
Plug ships with many plugs that you can add to the router plug pipeline, allowing you to plug something before a route matches or before a route is dispatched to. For example, if you want to add logging to the router, just do:
plug Plug.Logger
plug :match
plug :dispatch
Note Plug.Router
compiles all of your routes into a single function and relies on the Erlang VM to optimize the underlying routes into a tree lookup, instead of a linear lookup that would instead match route-per-route. This means route lookups are extremely fast in Plug!
This also means that a catch all match
is recommended to be defined, as in the example above, otherwise routing fails with a function clause error (as it would in any regular Elixir function).
Each route needs to return the connection as per the Plug specification. See Plug.Router
docs for more information.
Plug ships with a Plug.Test
module that makes testing your plugs easy. Here is how we can test the router from above (or any other plug):
defmodule MyPlugTest do
use ExUnit.Case, async: true
use Plug.Test
@opts AppRouter.init([])
test "returns hello world" do
# Create a test connection
conn = conn(:get, "/hello")
# Invoke the plug
conn = AppRouter.call(conn, @opts)
# Assert the response and status
assert conn.state == :sent
assert conn.status == 200
assert conn.resp_body == "world"
end
end
This project aims to ship with different plugs that can be re-used across applications:
Plug.CSRFProtection
- adds Cross-Site Request Forgery protection to your application. Typically required if you are usingPlug.Session
;Plug.Head
- converts HEAD requests to GET requests;Plug.Logger
- logs requests;Plug.MethodOverride
- overrides a request method with one specified in headers;Plug.Parsers
- responsible for parsing the request body given its content-type;Plug.RequestId
- sets up a request ID to be used in logs;Plug.Session
- handles session management and storage;Plug.SSL
- enforce requests through SSL;Plug.Static
- serves static files;
You can go into more details about each of them in our docs.
Modules that can be used after you use Plug.Router
or Plug.Builder
to help development:
Plug.Debugger
- shows a helpful debugging page every time there is a failure in a request;Plug.ErrorHandler
- allows developers to customize error pages in case of crashes instead of sending a blank one;
Plug source code is released under Apache 2 License. Check LICENSE file for more information.